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Select Acquisition Reform Provisions in the
House and Senate Versions of the FY2018
National Defense Authorization Act
Russell Rumbaugh
Analyst in Defense Acquisition
August 21, 2017
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R44920
Acquisition Reform in the House and Senate Versions of the FY2018 NDAA
Congressional Research Service
Contents
Overview ......................................................................................................................................... 1
Select Areas of Interest .................................................................................................................... 2
Commercial Items ..................................................................................................................... 2 Service Contracts ...................................................................................................................... 4 “Other Transaction”(OT) Authority .......................................................................................... 5 Intellectual Property .................................................................................................................. 6 Acquisition System Management.............................................................................................. 6
Data Analytics ..................................................................................................................... 7 Should-Cost Management ................................................................................................... 8 Software Acquisition ........................................................................................................... 8 Revising Previous Reforms ................................................................................................. 8
Common Provisions .................................................................................................................. 9
Conclusion ..................................................................................................................................... 10
Figures
Figure 1. Number of NDAA Provisions in Title VIII, “Acquisition Policy, Acquisition
Management, and Related Matters,” Since 1993 ......................................................................... 1
Tables
Table 1. Number of NDAA Provisions in Title VIII, “Acquisition Policy, Acquisition
Management, and Related Matters” ............................................................................................. 1
Contacts
Author Contact Information .......................................................................................................... 10
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Overview Since the 114
th Congress, the Armed Services Committees have worked to reform the Department
of Defense’s acquisition processes. This focus continues in each committee’s reported version of
the FY2018 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 2810 and S. 1519).
Congress has increased the volume of acquisition reform provisions enacted in recent years. In
the FY2017 bill, Congress enacted 88 provisions in Title VIII, “Acquisition Policy, Acquisition
Management, and Related Matters” (See Figure 1). That number of provisions was four times
greater than the average number of Title VIII provisions in the last 25 years. The FY2017 act
itself continued a trend started by the FY2016 enacted bill, which had 77 provisions in Title VIII,
the most since the FY2008 act, which had 60 provisions.
Figure 1. Number of NDAA Provisions in Title VIII, “Acquisition Policy, Acquisition
Management, and Related Matters,” Since 1993
Source: CRS analysis of public laws.
This year’s Senate bill includes 66 provisions in Title VIII compared to 85 in FY2017 and 55 in
FY2016 as displayed in Table 1. The House bill includes 48 provisions compared to 44 in
FY2017 and 58 in FY2016. In the FY2017 bill, the conference report identified 16 provisions of
which both chambers’ bills had similar versions; CRS has identified 11 similar provisions or
directive report language in both FY2018 reported bills.
Table 1. Number of NDAA Provisions in Title VIII, “Acquisition Policy, Acquisition
Management, and Related Matters”
FY2016 FY2017 FY2018
Senate bill 55 85 66
House bill 58 44 48
Final NDAA 77 88 n/a
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Source: FY2018 NDAA: S. 1519 as placed on Senate Legislative Calendar and H.R. 2810 as passed in the House;
FY2017 NDAA: P.L. 114-328, S. 2943 as passed in the Senate on June 14, 2016, H.R. 4909 as passed in the
House on May 18, 2016; FY2016 NDAA: P.L. 114-92, H.R. 1735 as passed in the Senate on June 18, 2015 and the
House on May 15, 2015.
Note: House bill FY2017 includes 5 provisions from Title XVII, Department of Defense Acquisition Agility
The bills address several major areas of shared interest:
commercial items,
contracts for services,
intellectual property,
“other transactions” authority, and
management of the acquisition system.
The FY2018 House bill builds on a stand-alone acquisition reform bill (H.R. 2511) introduced by
the Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee in May 2017. Following a model used for
FY2017, the stand-alone bill unveiled 15 of 48 provisions included in Title VIII of the House-
passed NDAA. All but two of these provisions were revised from the stand-alone bill’s text,
though several of the revisions include only minor technical or date changes. The House passed
H.R. 2810 as amended on July 14, 2017, by a vote of 344-81.
While the Senate Armed Services Committee did not preview its provisions before committee
action, it summarized the bill’s efforts as continuing “a comprehensive overhaul of the acquisition
system to ensure that our men and women in uniform have the equipment they need to succeed
and to drive innovation by allocating funds for advanced technology development and next-
generation capabilities to ensure America’s military dominance.”1 The Chairman of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, Senator John McCain, placed the committee-reported bill S. 1519 on
the Senate Legislative Calendar on July 10, 2017.
These shared areas of interest are treated individually below. Both bills include seven provisions
with very similar language not included in the major areas, which are discussed separately below.
Select Areas of Interest
Commercial Items
In the last few years, both chambers have focused on the procurement of commercial items.2 The
Senate created a new subtitle under Title VIII in its version of the FY2016 NDAA, “Provisions
Relating to Commercial Items,” which it repeated in its FY2017 and FY2018 bills. The House
responded in FY2017 by adding its own commercial items subtitle but it did not include a
separate subtitle in FY2018.
Title 10, Section 2377, of the United States Code sets out procedures to prefer the acquisition of
commercial items. Generally, commercial items are items sold to the public. However, items that
have been modified for government use can still be considered commercial items.3 A separate
1 Senate Armed Services Committee, “Summary of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018,” June
28, 2017, http://www.armed-services.senate.gov/download/fy18-ndaa-summary. 2 Government Accountability Office, Recent Legislation and DOD Actions Related to Commercial Item Acquisitions,
GAO-17-645, July 2017. 3 41 U.S.C. §103.
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term—commercially available off-the-shelf—applies to items that have not been modified in any
way for government use.4 To encourage the use of commercial items, Section 2375 exempts them
from many statutes and regulations that otherwise apply to defense acquisition.5 For example
items may be exempted from the government’s right to see the contractor’s cost and pricing data
and how the government solicits and evaluates bids may be streamlined.6 Many provisions in the
two bills expand the range of what may be considered commercial items, thus exempting them
from these and other regulations.
Intending to make buying commercial products easier, the House included a provision in its bill,
Section 801, to “establish a program to procure commercial products through online marketplaces
for purposes of expediting procurement and ensuring reasonable pricing of commercial products.”
In explaining the provision, Representative Thornberry stated: “If you're buying office supplies,
you ought to be able to go on Amazon and do it.”7
Representative Thornberry also expected over time DOD would expand the types of products it
purchases through the online marketplaces, as described in the committee report: “The committee
expects, however, that opportunities to purchase additional products through marketplaces may
arise as GSA gains familiarity with the use of online marketplaces.”8 The provision also includes
guidelines to ensure marketplaces comply with certain acquisition regulations, such as
compliance with domestic sourcing mandates and small business participation requirements, and
handling of suspended or debarred contractors.
Some observers have expressed concern the provision will not increase competition (and
therefore not reduce costs), which is one of the key reasons for Congress’s effort to promote
purchasing commercial items.9
The Senate’s subtitle E, “Provisions Related to Commercial Items,” specifically includes items
that expand what is considered a commercial item.
Section 852 adds sales to foreign governments to those made to State and local
governments, rendering all three as qualifications for considering an item a
commercial item.
Section 853 asserts that once an item is acquired as a commercial item, it is
always considered a commercial item.
Section 854 asserts the preference for commercial items supersedes small
business set-asides.
Section 855 mandates a review of those regulations and laws applicable to
commercial items, with a presumption they will be made inapplicable. It also
eliminates clauses currently required in contracts and subcontracts for
commercial items, to ease their procurement.
4 41 U.S.C. §104. 5 Federal Acquisition Regulation 12.503. 6 For a brief description of benefits and risks of commercial item contracting, see George Ash and Erin Toomey,
“Government Contracts: Reduced Risk Through Commercial Item Contracting,” ThomsonReuters Practical Law, 2015,
http://us.practicallaw.com/5-532-3257. 7 Sean Carberry, “Thornberry introduces DOD acquisition reform bill,” FCW, May 18, 2017. 8 H.Rept. 115-200, p. 162 9 “Section 801: Limiting Competition to ‘Increase’ Competition?,” The Coalition for Government Procurement’s FAR
and Beyond blog, June 27, 2017 and Jonathan Aronie, “Change Is Upon Us: An Analysis of the Section 801 COTS
Provisions of the 2018 NDAA,” National Law Review, June 28, 2017.
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Section 851 would modify the statutory definition of a commercial item to rule
out an item so modified it “includes a preponderance of government-unique
functions or essential characteristics.” Such a standard may restrict what is
considered a commercial item. However, depending on how modifications are
judged, it may also expand what is a commercial item by allowing more
modification.
Section 803 of the House bill would raise the dollar threshold at which a contractor must provide
the government cost or pricing data under the Truth in Negotiations Act (TINA) from $500,000 to
$2.5 million. Section 813 of the Senate bill would also raise the threshold, but only to $1 million.
These increased thresholds allow more products to be treated like commercial items, which are
already exempt, for the purposes of TINA. Raising the threshold would generally reduce the
compliance burden on contractors, but would also reduce government access to data supporting a
contractor’s purported pricing. In addition, Section 866 of the Senate bill’s subtitle G makes prior
foreign military sales a justification for exempting a transaction from TINA.
Section 812 of the Senate bill also would raise the simplified acquisition threshold for DOD from
the government-wide threshold of $100,000 to $250,000. Purchases under the simplified
acquisition threshold are exempt from a number of regulations and laws, giving such acquisitions
commercial-like characteristics.10
To ensure contracting and procurement officers understand these and other features of
commercial items, Section 866 of the House bill and Section 841 of the Senate bill use similar,
though not exact, language which would require training on acquiring commercial items.
In contrast to these efforts to expand the use of commercial items, the Senate committee report
also includes directive report language that cautions against unguarded use of commercial items
and services. In discussing U.S. Transportation Command’s ability to share information across
unclassified networks with its commercial partners, the report states “While commercial service
providers can offer innovation, efficiencies, and cost savings, these benefits should not be to the
detriment of security or other military unique standards.”11
The report also expresses concern that
program managers are relying too much on commercial power supplies: “The fact remains,
commercially available power supplies remain a primary failure mode of military systems.”12
Finally, the report directs GAO to study whether some suppliers are overcharging DOD for spare
parts by “disguising their cost structures from procurement officers,” which the suppliers have
done at least partly by claiming their items are commercial items.13
Service Contracts
Both chambers emphasized oversight of service contracts. The House report states “The bill
increases oversight of service contracts, which constitute a majority of Department of Defense
contracting dollars.” The Senate report also emphasizes “[t]he sheer size, complexity, and value
10 Federal Acquisition Regulation 13.005 and 13.006 list the regulations and laws not applicable to purchases below the
simplified acquisition threshold. 11 S.Rept. 115-125, p. 208. 12 S.Rept. 115-125, p. 199. 13 S.Rept. 115-125, pp. 206-207. For an example of the concern the report is illustrating, see Department of Defense
Office of Inspector General, “Acquisition: Spare Parts Procurements From TransDigm, Inc.,” D-2006-055, February
23, 2006.
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of these service contracts.”14
GAO has found that despite this scale both DOD and Congress track
the funding spent on products better than they do the funding spent on services.15
Both chambers seek to better evaluate the services contracts DOD lets. The Senate bill would
prohibit DOD from entering into service contracts unless they were measured by outcome or
performance rather than effort—for example, the number of bathrooms to be cleaned rather than
hours spent cleaning bathrooms—unless DOD provides a justification (§818). The House bill
would not require outcome-based measures, but House report language directs the Secretary of
Defense to evaluate their use.16
The House bill emphasizes similar points by directing existing
review boards to assess the need for the contract rather than how well the contract complies with
regulations (§814) and it encourages the use of common guidelines for evaluating the need for
services contracts (§869).
Both bills seek greater visibility of service contracts. The Senate bill requires DOD to provide an
estimate of the number of service contracts and their total cost in DOD’s five year plan (§829).
The House bill requires only information on the first year but that it be displayed by category in a
common way across all DOD organizations (§814).
The Senate bill would create a temporary authority for DOD to enter into multi-year services
contracts for up to 15 years instead of the current limit of 5 years (§819) and would echo the
emphasis on commercial products by requiring the Secretary of Defense to list industries where
there are significant numbers of commercial services providers (§820).
Finally, the House bill again contains a provision limiting the total amount spent on services
contracts to the amount requested in FY2010 (§870). This limit was enacted from FY2012 to
FY2015. Although the House bill carried an extension in FY2016 and FY2017, neither provision
was enacted.
“Other Transaction”(OT) Authority
Both bills seek to increase DOD’s use of “other transaction” (OT) authority. An OT is a special
vehicle that allows DOD, using the authority found in 10 U.S.C. §2371, to enter into transactions
with private organizations for basic, applied, and advanced research projects.17
An OT, in
practice, is defined in the negative: an OT is not a contract, grant, or cooperative agreement, and
its advantages come mostly from OTs not being subject to certain procurement statutes and
acquisition regulations.18
The Senate bill includes a subtitle dedicated to such transactions. The Senate bill Section 871 and
House bill Section 855 would both extend this authority to include developing prototypes. The
Senate bill would also:
require education and training on OT (§872),
set a preference for using OT for science and technology projects (§873), and
14 H.Rept. 115-200, p. 552 and S.Rept. 115-125, p. 44. 15 Government Accountability Office, “Improved Use of Available Data Needed to Better Manage and Forecast Service
Contract Requirements,” GAO-16-119, February 2016. 16 H.Rept. 115-200, p. 156. 17 “Use of ‘Other Transaction’ Agreements Limited and Mostly for Research and Development Activities,”
Government Accountability Office, GAO-16-209, January 2016. 18 This description of OTs taken from archived CRS Report RL34760, Other Transaction (OT) Authority, by L. Elaine
Halchin. Available from author.
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list OT as an authorized means to perform research and development programs
(§874).
While the House bill does not include similar provisions, it does include report language directing
the Secretary of Defense to provide a briefing “on ways to improve the use of other
transactions.”19
Section 814 of the Senate bill would extend what counts as competitive procedures in soliciting
bids. Currently, DOD can use peer or scientific reviews of proposals to select who conducts basic
research. The provision would allow DOD to also use such reviews to select who conducts
applied and advanced research and development projects, and who builds prototypes. While not
formally an OT authority under 10 U.S.C. 2371, the provision expands how DOD can enter into
agreements for similar purposes.
Intellectual Property
The House and Senate bills also both focus on bolstering DOD’s role in acquiring intellectual
property rights for the goods and services it procures. DOD seeks intellectual property rights to
ensure the department does not become beholden to a single contractor.20
However, some—
particularly in industry—fear government claims to intellectual property rights will limit
innovation.21
The House bill would require that DOD negotiate a price for a major weapon system’s technical
data before entering into a development or production contract (§812). The bill would also create
an office within the Office of the Secretary of Defense to help negotiate these rights and
promulgate policy and guidance on acquiring intellectual property rights (§813).
The Senate bill would expand the statutory definition of technical data for software programs and
what contractors must provide when delivering software programs (§881).
Additionally, the Senate bill would require the U.S. Government to retain the rights to medical
research developed exclusively with federal funds (§892). The bill also requires DOD to report
when a prime contractor limits its subcontractors’ intellectual property rights, a concern which
most often stems from a subcontractor believing it has not received fair payment for intellectual
property it developed (§899). A directed GAO study on spare parts suppliers may involve
intellectual property rights as well; some of the concerns that prompted the GAO study stemmed
from suppliers claiming proprietary intellectual property locked the government into unfavorable
prices.22
Acquisition System Management
Following on previous efforts to reform acquisition process management, both bills again propose
changing parts of the process.
19 H.Rept. 115-200, p. 156. 20 “Guidance: Intellectual Property Strategy,” Department of Defense, August 2014,
bbp.dau.mil/docs/IP_Strategy_Brochure_FINAL_em.pdf. 21 Tony Bertuca, “New Acquisition Reform Bill would Create DOD Intellectual Property Chief,” Inside Defense, May
22, 2017. For an overview of the tensions in defense intellectual property rights, see Richard Van Atta et al,
“Department of Defense Access to Intellectual Property for Weapon Systems Sustainment,” Institute for Defense
Analyses, May 2017. 22 S.Rept. 115-125, pp. 206-207. See further description of this report on page 3.
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Section 804 of the Senate bill would direct that the defense-specific acquisition
regulations adopt language stating the purpose of the defense acquisition system.
Section 811 of the House bill would insert new requirements to consider
“reliability and maintainability” when DOD designs weapon systems. The House
bill would also codify use of operating and support costs in evaluating major
programs at every stage of acquisition (§852).
Section 806 of the Senate bill would require a report on whether Special
Operations Command should have the same acquisition authorities as the military
departments.
The bills also address data analytics, should-cost management, software acquisition, and revising
previous reforms.
Data Analytics
Both bills include provisions to enhance DOD’s use of data to manage acquisition and other
processes. Most of the data analytics provisions seem to respond to concerns that DOD is not
effectively using data—especially centralized data—to support decision-making.23
Section 831 of
the House bill would require DOD to establish an architecture that extracts, stores, and displays
data from every DOD component in a standard format to make that data better available to the
Secretary of Defense. This data would cover:
accounting for expenditures,
budget and programming data,
acquisition costs and other data, including operating and support (O&S) and
maintenance, and
contracts and task orders.
The Senate bill would create pilot programs to integrate data from across DOD (§937) covering:
the budget,
logistics,
personnel security and insider threats, and
two other “challenges” identified by the Secretary of Defense.
The Senate bill would require greater use of data analytics in the acquisition process by directing
DOD to collect and share more data (§936).
The House bill would require that DOD provide more data to Congress in its annual budget
documents, including specific displays of funding for major programs’ test and evaluation,
developmental and operational, as well as purchasing cost and technical data from contractors
(§832).
Section 833 would require more information on operational test and evaluation. However, while
most of the data analytics provisions seem to respond to concerns DOD is not effectively using
data, Section 833 appears to respond to concerns independent testers are not fully considering
23 For more background, see CRS Video WVB00136, Improving DOD Business Operations: Data Analytics at DOD,
by Lynn M. Williams and CRS Report R44329, Using Data to Improve Defense Acquisitions: Background, Analysis,
and Questions for Congress, by Moshe Schwartz.
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military service perspectives.24
Specifically, it requires the independent Director of Operational
Test and Evaluation to explain why he is reviewing certain programs, to allow military
departments to comment on his reports, and to contrast how the capabilities of new systems
would improve on older systems regardless of whether those capabilities are testing well or not.25
Should-Cost Management
Section 803 of the Senate bill would mandate regulating “should-cost” reviews—a DOD initiative
of the last few years intended to lower prices DOD pays—to ensure the contractor on a program
is treated fairly.26
The House did not include such a provision, but its report language shows a
similar concern about how contractors are treated and requires a briefing from the Secretary of
Defense.27
Software Acquisition
The Senate bill includes a series of provisions reforming DOD purchasing software. Section 835
of the Senate bill would stipulate that software programs, like automated information or defense
business systems, are not major defense acquisition programs, which require a high level of
oversight. Sections 883 to 885 would require DOD to identify software-intensive major programs,
defense business systems, and software to be developed and acquired using “agile” methods. The
sections define “agile” methods as “delivering multiple, rapid, incremental capabilities to the user
for operational use, evaluation, and feedback” using “the incremental development and fielding
capabilities, commonly called ‘spirals,’ ‘spins,’ or ‘sprints,’ which can be measured in a few
weeks or months.” Furthermore, Section 886 would mandate that all unclassified software
developed for DOD be managed as open source software.
Revising Previous Reforms
Finally, the bills propose revising several reform provisions enacted in the last two years’
NDAAs.
The Senate bill would:
require confirmation of the Under Secretary for Research and Engineering
created in the FY2017 NDAA instead of allowing the incumbent Under
Secretary for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics to assume the position
with no confirmation hearing (§905);
downgrade the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment
(A&S) created in the FY2017 NDAA from an Executive Schedule II position
to an Executive Schedule III (§904); and
clarify that A&S has only “advisory authority” rather than “supervisory
authority” over programs the military services are managing (§903).
24 Sydney Freedberg, “Cut ‘Pure Overhead,’ Navy Sec. Mabus Says: DFAS, DLA, DOT&E,” Breaking Defense, June
2, 2015. 25 H.Rept. 115-200, p. 170. 26 For background on should-cost management and the broader DOD initiative, see CRS In Focus IF10588, What Is
DOD’s Better Buying Power?, by Ceir Coral. 27 H.Rept. 115-200, p. 158.
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Section 854 of the House bill would amend the FY2017 requirement for
sustainment reviews to allow the Under Secretary for Acquisition and
Sustainment to see the documents submitted during the reviews.
Section 825 in the Senate bill and Section 856 in the House bill would add two
cases to the FY2017 language that limited when lowest-price, technically
acceptable (LPTA) criteria could be used to select contractors for programs;
The House section would add electronic test and measurement equipment as
a case in which LPTA shall be avoided.
The Senate bill goes on to prohibit the use of LPTA for all major defense
acquisition programs, which are principally programs so designated by the
Secretary of Defense (§836).28
The FY2016 bill created a penalty to the military departments if the programs they manage fare
poorly: 3% of the cost overruns in the major programs the department manages would be
transferred from the department’s research, development, testing and evaluation accounts to a
Rapid Acquisition Prototyping Fund created by that act and managed within the Office of the
Secretary of Defense. The original language allowed cost overruns to be offset by underruns, but
Section 827 of the Senate bill would eliminate that offset.
Common Provisions
While most of the areas discussed above were of shared interest to both chambers, the bills do not
agree on how to address those areas. Other provisions, however, have nearly identical language
indicating that the chambers already agree how to address them.
House bill Section 843 and Senate bill Section 899B would except contracted
DOD operations from using $1 coins.
House bill Section 842 and Senate bill Section 899A would extend from 20 years
to 30 years the maximum length contracts can be let to store, handle or distribute
liquid fuels and natural gas.
House bill Section 851 and Senate bill Section 823 would limit contracting
officers to “definitizing” contracts only after a certain period has elapsed once the
contracting officer notifies the contractor of the impending definitization.
“Definitizing” refers to specifying on what terms a contract is being executed;
some contracts can be signed before all of the terms are agreed. The House bill
applies these limits to contract actions greater than $1 billion and after 30 days
elapse while the Senate bill applies the limits to actions greater than $50 million
and after 60 days elapse.
House bill Section 863 and Senate bill Section 824 would add safety equipment
to those items for which a contractor may not be selected based on a lowest price
technically acceptable methodology. The House bill only includes aviation
critical safety equipment.
House bill Section 867 would require DOD websites posting contracting
opportunities to notify small businesses they may be eligible for free Federal
procurement technical assistance services. The Senate report includes similar
28 10 U.S.C. §2430.
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directive report language.29
House bill Section 853 would allow Procurement
Technical Assistance Centers (PTACs)—local entities that help small businesses
navigate DOD contracting—to carry over income to another fiscal year. The
Senate report includes directive report language encouraging the Defense
Logistics Agency to fund a greater share of some PTACs.30
House bill Section 868 would require a GAO report on a FY2013-authorized
program to improve contractors’ business systems’ ability to provide information
to DOD. Senate report language directs a similar study.31
Both bills adjust what items must be procured from manufacturers in the United States, Canada,
the United Kingdom, and Australia as defined by 10 U.S.C. 2500(1). The Senate bill in Section
863 sunsets the requirement to buy all items but ball and roller bearings from such manufacturers.
In contrast, House bill Section 862 adds the components for auxiliary ships to the existing list.
Conclusion Both chambers’ versions of the National Defense Authorization Act demonstrate Congress’s
continued interest in reforming the defense acquisition process. While less momentous than the
last year’s organizational change breaking DOD’s acquisition office into two parts, the FY2018
bills contain a number of provisions that, if enacted, will continue changing the DOD acquisition
system.
Author Contact Information
Russell Rumbaugh
Analyst in Defense Acquisition
[email protected], 7-2212
29 S.Rept. 115-125, p. 205. 30 S.Rept. 115-125, p. 206. 31 S.Rept. 115-125, p. 200.